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Scripture:Psalm 86
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Richard Cheri

Scripture: Psalm 86 Composer of "[Incline your ear, O LORD; answer me]" in One in Faith

Jalonda Robertson

Scripture: Psalm 86 Composer of "[Incline your ear, O LORD; answer me]" in One in Faith

E. D. Culpepper

Scripture: Psalm 86 Composer of "[Bow down Thine ear]" in Morning Light

Hugo Filoia

Scripture: Psalm 86:8-13 Composer of "SALMO 136" in Celebremos Su Gloria

Dennis Friesen Carper

b. 1953 Person Name: Dennis Friesen-Carper Scripture: Psalm 86:15-16 Arranger of "BENEDICTION" in Voices Together Dr. Dennis Friesen-Carper (b. 1953) is Reddel Professor of Music at Valparaiso University where he conducts the Symphony, opera, oratorio and musical theatre, and teaches composition. He has served as Music Director for Indiana Opera North, the Pasadena Philharmonic, and the Northwest Indiana Symphony Youth Orchestra. Recent professional and teaching activities include a New Year's Eve 2002 concert conducting his own works, as well as Puccini, Copland, Strauss and traditional Chinese music with the professional symphony of Nanjing, PR China. That trip also featured conducting visits to the Nanjing University and Youth Symphonies and a conducting master class at the Shanghai Conservatory. Domestic conducting appearances include the South Bend Symphony, Lake Superior Chamber Orchestra, Mid-Kansas Symphony, Elkhart Symphony, Indiana University South Bend Philharmonic, Great Lakes and Lutheran Summer Music camp orchestras. Previous academic positions include teaching posts at Goshen College and Bethel College. He has served as festival conductor and clinician from Texas to Ontario, conducted and performed in over forty states, China, Canada, Europe, Korea and Japan. He holds DMA and MMus degrees from the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University and a BA from Bethel College, Kansas, and has performed extensively as a jazz pianist. Active as a composer and arranger, Dr. Friesen-Carper recently completed a term as Composer in Residence for the Northwest Indiana Symphony, whose conductor Kirk Muspratt commissioned the overture Fireworks for the opening of the 2001-2002 season. His works have been commissioned by the Houston Symphony, Tucson Symphony, Houston Chamber Singers, South Bend Symphony, Mid-Kansas Symphony, colleges, seminaries, churches, schools, and the 1999 harp festival sponsored by the Bangkok Symphony. The review of his concerto for flute and harp enthused, "The evening's highlight undoubtedly was the premiere of The Ring of Kerry...With its echoes of Celtic harp and Irish jigs...its rhythms and its melodies delighted and enchanted the orchestra that played it and those fortunate enough to hear it." His work has been published by Augsburg Fortress and Faith and Life Press, and has been recorded by Minnesota Public Radio, Platshon, VUCA Media Productions, and Pro Arte. Recent commissions include Processional and Fanfare for the Southwest Michigan Symphony Orchestra, and "My True Gift's to Come," a setting of a poem by National Book Award winner, Walter Wangerin, Jr., premiered in Chicago's Orchestra Hall. His Step Dances were premiered in a prize-winning performance at the 2001 Fischoff Chamber Music Competition. The House of Wisdom, a short commissioned cantata on texts from Proverbs and I Peter was premiered on groundbreaking weekend for the new Christopher Center for Library and Information Resources recently opened on the Valparaiso campus. Other recent works include five madrigals and a dozen pieces of incidental music for Shakespeare's As You Like It. A Mass for Peacemakers, his setting of the Lutheran communion liturgy in contemporary and vernacular styles, was premiered in services at Trinity Lutheran in Valparaiso, and at the Holden Village retreat center near Lake Chelan, Washington. The "Gloria" from that setting was selected by the ELCA for inclusion in the Renewing Worship liturgical supplement published in 2004. --www.sbmp.com/

Wolfgang Dachstein

1487 - 1553 Person Name: Wolfgang Dachstein, c. 1487-1553 Scripture: Psalm 86:12 Composer of "AN WASSERFLÜSSEN BABYLON" in Christian Worship Dachstein, Wolfgang, was, prior to the Reformation, a monk at Strassburg, and organist of the Cathedral. In 1524 he espoused the cause of the Reformation, and in 1525 was appointed organist and assistant preacher at St. Thomas's Church, which offices he held till at least 1530 (Koch, ii. 103-104).Along with his friend M. Greitter (q.v.) he edited the first Strassburg Hymnbook, the Kirchen ampt, published in 1525. Two of his Psalm versions have been translated into English, but he is best known as author of the melody which is set to the first of these.    i. An Wasserflüssen Babylon. [Ps. cxxxvii.] 1st pub. 1525, pt. iii, as above, and thence in Wackernage, iii. p. 98, in 5 st. of 10 1. The translations, almost identical, are : (1) “ At the ryvers of Babilon," by Bp. Coverdale, 1539 (Remains, 1846, p. 571). (2) "At the Rivers of Babylon," in the Gude and Godly Ballates (ed. 1568, folio 58, ed. 1868, p. 99).    ii. O Herr, wer würt sein Wohnung han. [Ps. xv.] 1st published 1525 as above, and thence in Wackernagel, iii. p. 98, in 3 st. of 7 1. Translated as " O Lord, quha sail in hevin dwell with the," in the Gude and Godly Ballates, (ed. 1568, folio 46, ed. 1868, p. 78). [Rev. James Mearns, M.A.] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Keith Duke

Scripture: Psalm 86 Composer (refrain) of "[O Lord, you are good]" in Christian Worship

Timothy Blinko

b. 1965 Scripture: Psalm 86 Composer (tone) of "[O Lord, you are good]" in Christian Worship

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